Search - Stefano Gervasoni, Arthur Kampela, Gyorgy Ligeti :: The Eleventh Finger

The Eleventh Finger
Stefano Gervasoni, Arthur Kampela, Gyorgy Ligeti
The Eleventh Finger
Genres: Special Interest, Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (9) - Disc #1

Jenny Lin is probably the finest little-known pianist around. This is her fourth solo CD: each previous one is fascinating, filled with brilliant performances and a sheer love of music-making, and each one has garnered rav...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Stefano Gervasoni, Arthur Kampela, Gyorgy Ligeti, Randy Nordschow, Elliott [1] Sharp, James Tenney, Claude Vivier, Jenny Lin
Title: The Eleventh Finger
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Koch Int'l Classics
Original Release Date: 1/1/2006
Re-Release Date: 8/1/2006
Genres: Special Interest, Classical
Styles: Chamber Music, Historical Periods, Classical (c.1770-1830), Instruments, Electronic
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 099923767022

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Jenny Lin is probably the finest little-known pianist around. This is her fourth solo CD: each previous one is fascinating, filled with brilliant performances and a sheer love of music-making, and each one has garnered rave reviews. Clearly it is her avoidance of standard repertoire that is keeping Lin a semi-secret: I urge you to break the spell and allow her to introduce you to some unfamiliar music. This is an album of razzle-dazzle, contemporary piano music. Two of the pieces were composed in the 1970s and '80s, the rest are less than 15 years old. The CD begins with Arthur Kampela's "Nosturnos," an excursion into a whirlwind of notes which will keep you riveted. Three Etudes (Nos. 16-18) by Ligeti follow. The first is utterly lovely and easy-going to start, gaining speed and changing mood half way through until it tinkles away into the ether; the second seems like a game of chase; the third, and briefest, is at first limping, then runs like a demon. "Chromatic Canon" by James Tenney is a minimalist piece in which Lin plays both live and along with a tape of herself playing another part; it is a hypnotic arc of music filled with itchy dissonances. Claude Vivier's "Shiraz" is based on a four-note chord pounded away into dozens of alternate-sounding configurations. Elliott Sharp's "Suberrebus" combines piano with computer processing; the different hues you'll hear will keep you on your toes. And there are a couple of other remarkable pieces as well. This CD is not for the timid: but jump in, the water's unexpectedly fine. And Jenny Lin, to contradict the CD's title, sounds as if she has 14 fingers--each perfectly under control. --Robert Levine
 

CD Reviews

The pummeling piano for after-modernity.
scarecrow | Chicago, Illinois United States | 02/20/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)

"One can never argue with great piano playing, performances inspired transcending the actual music, Beyond the Four Corners of the Page.



What can one say for the modern piano and what has become of it? The continuing violence of the century of the turmoils and deep rooted hatreds that still exist throughout the populace spills toward the productions of culture.

Here we see mostly the pummeled piano, perhaps in its post-electronic manifestations,resounded just about to death, perhaps the repression of the aesthetic living in exile makes for the hysteric. At least Lacan would admit this;(the subvesive is always a step from the hysteric); or is it the vigours of modernity itself never allowed to realize itself, co-opted,forced to jump through market hoops? that forces composers to go after the juggler.



The music here however is accessible, there are no alienation schemes at work, perhaps most of the music herein suggests some darkness that have yet to resolved themselves, itselves from the modernist, or after modernist paradigm. Viver's "Shiraz" is quite powerful, Shiraz was the Persian capital at the foothills of the Zagros Mountains of the Zand dynasty. Here the music doesn't let you go, rolling in encapsulated violence. You cannot say it belongs to any school, perhaps Xenakis is the closest reference here. The piece packs a punch,not quite a professional boxer's punch perhaps a composer's. Likewise Elliott Sharp's "Suberrebus"; "rebus" is Latin for "Things", so perhaps "below things",the darknesses, tunnels of New York City.;his is an incredibly free-standing work, full of raw combustible energy,unfinished scaling all the registers of the piano, yet again its musical language does not suggest anywheres to go, it is fully contained within itself.This is the best piece of Sharp I've heard,Uusually his music scales too far into the self-indulgent side. Here the piano solo has its own sets of problematics that he realizes quite nicely. I'd like to hear this work live, it would be even more powerful; resonding, resonanting.



The Gervasioni piece is very gently beautiful, deeply lyrical. He crafts and hones his music very well, lapidarian,like a diamond cutter, very sparce, threadbare, very Italian for his generation. The music begins in the upper tinckly register of the piano and slowly descends,yet it is not rushed it takes its own time of where it wants to go. But you become swept away by the evocations/invocations of the well-crafted selected intervals.

And Kampela's work as well, the "Nosturnos" owes nothing to the minimal cause although that might be your first impression,look a little deeper; in that it/he finds his own voice, allowing the intervals to speak for themselves. The music takes the time necessary to convey this.



The Nordschow engages gratuitously in an old pointillism that seems to be still with us,like a lingua franca,this could have been the young Boulez, but here there is less anxiety, and more freedom, like he is simply trying this musical language to see if it still holds something to exploit. Still the over all freedoms scouring all registers of the piano is thrilling, exciting in an unpretencious way.



Ligeti, these three "etudes" are from the more reflective Third Book, the "White on White is missing another one that took the break-neck speed of Book 2 to slow down the set;All these Etudes are part now of the repertoire for all pianists.The indebtedness to Conlon Nancarrow is not always apparent, but Ligeti always had this affinity for "musical automata",all his works exhibit this content. I suppose you need to learn all of them if you want to keep up with selling yourself as a modern pianist these days. I grow bored with these "Etudes" you hear them once and they exhaust their own constitution,long before the work is over. More pummeling again, deeply accessible. Ligeti is a genius enough to know his materials and does impart a means for their own longevity.This Book 3 Etudes redeems the others.



All the playing is incredible, wonderful clean and energized piano playing, clean and precise, yet the irrational content of the music is given what it needs."